This biannual learning unit is not being organized in 2017-2018 !
The course will also attempt to combine the study of the selected theme with a reflection on the aims and methods of the philosophy of the human and social sciences.
At the end of this learning unit, the student is able to : | |
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Upon completion of the course, the student should be able to pursue, in a well-informed and original manner, a question chosen from the area of the philosophy of the human and social sciences. |
The contribution of this Teaching Unit to the development and command of the skills and learning outcomes of the programme(s) can be accessed at the end of this sheet, in the section entitled “Programmes/courses offering this Teaching Unit”.
This seminar will study the concept of the state in the social sciences. It will approach the concept on two complementary levels of analysis. A first level will focus on retracing the genealogical history of the state in social sciences as a specific mode of organizing both territory and different types of collective action, through the lens of those institutional mechanisms - ideological and material, singular and multiple - by which social actors are subjectivized. This first branch of study will also examine the varying forms that the state has taken in different geographical zones, both in Europe and throughout the (post)colonial world. The second part of the course will address the issue of the transformation of the norms regulating the social sciences' epistemological frameworks for understanding the state. The key issue of this both historical-geographical and epistemological study will be to question the status of a new social contract by way of a systematic questioning of the conditions with which the collective subject is confronted, in order to best guarantee the normative demands of its members.
Presentation of the question during the oral exam takes the duration of fifteen minutes.
The written work can be done in French, English, Spanish, or German, in agreement with the Professor.
2) Balibar E., La crainte des masses. Politique et philosophie avant et après Marx, Galilée, Paris, 1997.
3) Balibar E. et Wallerstein I., Race, nation, classe, La Découverte, Paris, 2007.
4) Bourdieu P., Sur l'État. Cours au Collège de France (1989-1992), Seuil, Paris, 2012.
5) Dussel E., 1492. El encubrimiento del Otro, Plural, La Paz, 1992.
6) S. Federici, Caliban et la sorcière. Femmes, corps et accumulation primitive, Collectif Senonevero (Trad.), revue et complétée par J. Guazzinni, Entremonde et Senonevero, Marseille et Généve/Paris, 2014.
7) Foucault M., Sécurité, territoire, population, Gallimard/Seuil, Paris, 2004.
8) Gilroy P., The Black Atlantic. Modernity and Double Consciousness, Londres/New York, Verso, 2002.
9) Hegel, Leçons sur le droit naturel et la science de l'État,Vrin, Paris, 2002.
10) Hobbes T., Léviathan, Gallimard, Paris, 2000.
11) Lefebvre J.-P. et Macherey P., Hegel et la société, PUF, Paris, 1984.
12) Lenoble J. et Maesschalck M., Démocratie, droit et gouvernance, Éd. Revue du Droit, Sherbrooke, 2011.
13) Lordon F., Imperium. Structures et affects des corps politiques, La Fabrique, Paris, 2015.
14) Macherey P., Le sujet des normes, Éd. Amsterdam, Paris, 2014.
15) Macherey P.,De Canguilhem à Foucault : la force des normes, La Fabrique, Paris, 2009.
16) Marx K., L'idéologie allemande, in ID, 'uvres, Tome III, Gallimard, coll. La Pléiade, Paris, 1982.
17) Mignolo W., Local Histories, Global Designs: Coloniality, Subaltern Knowledges, and Border Thinking, Princeton, Princeton University Press, 2012.
18) Poulantzas N., L'État, le pouvoir, le socialisme, PUF, Paris, 1978.
19) Poulantzas N. (dir.), La Crise de l'État, PUF, Paris, 1976.
20) Quijano, « Race » et colonialité du pouvoir, Mouvements, 2007/3, N° 51, p. 111-118.
21) Rousseau J.-J., Du contrat social, Flammarion, Paris, 2001.
22) C. Schmitt, Le nomos de la terre, L. Deroche-Gurcel (trad.), P. Haggenmacher (révision et présentation.), PUF, Paris, 2012.